This book is intended for those who feel something is missing. For those who cherish their Reformation heritage but experience the lack of a rooted faith. For those who crave spiritual depth yet have been cautioned against looking too far back. For those who rightly suspect that the ancient Church holds treasures we've overlooked, and who wish to recover them without compromising the gospel in the process. I am one of those people. I am Protestant. I am grateful for the clarity, conviction, and gospel urgency that runs through the best of the Reformation tradition. However, I have also learned that the Reformation was not a blank slate. It was a return - a return to something already present in the early Church, long before the medieval corruptions that the Reformers rightly challenged. That Early Church is ours too. The wisdom of the desert fathers is ours. The profound thinking of Catholic theologians, when in step with Scripture, is ours. The reverence of liturgical worship is ours. Mary's example of discipleship is ours. The practice of confession is ours. These are not "Catholic things" that we're borrowing. They are Christian things we left behind. The goal of this book is not to argue for reunion with Rome. It's not to flatten doctrinal differences or pretend that the Reformation doesn't matter. It does matter - deeply. However, recovering lost wisdom does not betray the gospel; instead, it deepens our experience of it. It anchors us more fully in the historical Church and strengthens our present discipleship. We live in an age of spiritual shallowness. Attention spans are short. Formation is thin. Many of our churches have become expressions of the broader culture - anxious, fragmented, performative, over-programmed, and emotionally underdeveloped. Our theological systems are sound, but our souls are brittle. What we need isn't novelty; it's rootedness. And there is no root system richer than the one the Spirit has cultivated through two thousand years of global, historic Christianity. That root system includes more than just Calvin and Luther; it encompasses Irenaeus, Benedict, Teresa of Ávila, and yes, even Aquinas. It comprises the monastics and the mystics, along with rhythms and practices that were born in the desert and tested by fire. We don't honor our Protestant ancestors by staying shallow. We honor them by going deeper - by seeking the full maturity that the Church was always meant to grow into. If we are to become a people of resilience, depth, and beauty again, we must recover the practices and perspectives we once discarded. We must learn to live not only as people of truth, but as people of presence - soaked in prayer, humility, and the kind of holiness that cannot be faked. This introduction is a doorway. In the pages ahead, we will explore what was lost-not to romanticize the past, but to recover what still holds the power to shape our future. We will examine ancient practices like confession, forgotten figures like the desert fathers, neglected teachings about Mary, and the immense intellectual and spiritual wealth of Catholic theologians who never stopped loving Scripture and Christ. We will ask hard questions: Can Protestants re-engage with these issues without compromising our convictions? Can we recover a reverence for tradition without losing our dependence on Scripture? Can we build a Protestant future that is spiritually rich, historically informed, and deeply Christ-centered? I believe the answer is yes.



Autorentext

Stephen White is a former pastor, Christian school superintendent, and vice president of a leading Christian urban ministry in San Jose, California. With decades of experience working alongside hurting and broken people and building ministries rooted in compassion and justice, Stephen writes with the heart of a shepherd and the insight of a seasoned leader and teacher. His writings invite readers to experience God's grace, presence, and compassion more deeply. He and his wife, Dawn, feel very blessed to be the parents of six adult children and grandparents to ten grandchildren-plus there's always his dog, Gracie, by his side.

Titel
Throwing the Baby Out with the Holy Water
Untertitel
Reclaiming Forgotten Riches of Our Faith
EAN
9798385054312
Format
E-Book (epub)
Hersteller
Veröffentlichung
22.08.2025
Digitaler Kopierschutz
frei
Dateigrösse
0.32 MB
Anzahl Seiten
168